Are you sure there were 3 dead from this event? I have met Lt Weston a few times in Appledore and he described the event as he edged in to rescue the men from the Landing Craft that had been the first to be mined and on withdrawing through the mined area he ordered all hands on deck except the MM who was killed.

Quoted from "FROM TROMBAY TO CHANGI, THE STORY OF ARAKAN COASTAL FORCES, WRITTEN AND PUBLISHED BY OFFICERS WHO PARTICIPATED"

AT 09:30 THE MLS DEPLOYED TO STARBOARD AND PORT TO ENGAGE ANY TARGET THAT PRESENTED ITSELF, AND THE LANDING CRAFT ROARED ONTO THE BEACHES TO DISGORGE TROOPS WHO SPREAD OUT IN ALL DIRECTIONS.

THE 37TH FLOTILLA WERE ON THEIR FIRST OPERATION, HAVING COME DOWN DIRECTLY FROM CHITTAGONG. SOME OF THE 55TH AND 37TH FLOTILLA MADE A SWEEP OF THE INNER HARBOUR, WHILE ML 440, ML 474 AND ML 476 ANCHORED IN COMPANY WITH ML 891 OFF THE BEACH TO AWAIT FURTHER ORDERS.

AT 11:00 AN LCA WITH 32 MEN ON BOARD, WHILE APPROACHING THE BEACH IN THE VICINITY OF THE MLS SUDDENLY BLEW UP AND DISAPPEARED IN CLOUDS OF SMOKE. THE TIDE HAD GONE DOWN AND THE LANDING HAD TAKEN PLACE OVER A MINEFIELD. THE MLS PICKED UP SEVEN SURVIVORS, AND ML 474, ML 476 AND ML 891 TOOK THEM TO HMS RAPID AND LAY ALONGSIDE. ML 891 CAME OUT ASTERN AND JUST AS SHE CLEARED THE DESTROYER, A COLOSSAL EXPLOSION TOOK PLACE AND ML 891 DISAPPEARED IN A VIVID CLOUD OF FLAMING SMOKE. SURVIVORS CLINGING TO THE KEEL OF THE UPTURNED ML WERE TAKEN OFF BY A MOTOR BOAT FROM HMS RAPID, THE MOTOR BOAT BEING SAFE BECAUSE OF ITS SHALLOW DRAFT. FOURTEEN OF THE MLS CREW OF SEVENTEEN WERE PICKED UP UNWOUNDED OR WITH MINOR WOUNDS.

Thank you David and Christian. John Weston lived in Appledore, North Devon with his wife in a house with the walls covered with his paintings. His local pub was I think the Royal George. I have lost touch with my Burma Star friends in North Devon and don't know anything about his dear wife. If the War hadn't ended he was to be appointed as Lt Cdr of the 14th Flotilla for Operation Zipper in place of Lt Cdr Leslie. Over a beer in the Royal George in his Devon accent he proclaimed, "I would have led you to your death!"

Thank you both for your very comprehensive replies. As it happens I know Appledore very well. Father's (and eventually Hector's) boat was built at Blackmore's yard in Bideford and fitted out in Appledore, it carried out trials in the Torridge estuary. Grandfather moved to Northam after the war, and I spent much of my childhood there. Shame I never met Lt Weston.

George Lay was the POMM on ML 891. George was in hospital in Vizagapatam and on 21 Jan 45, and POMM Walker from ML 896 had taken his place , on loan . ML 896 was having Depth finding equipment fitted to enable it to scout in front of HMIS Narbada up the Chaungs which it did in later operations on the Arakan
When he recovered from his injuries , John Weston became NOIC Calcutta
My father, David Herbert Lester deceased , was crew on ML 892 from Durban to Vizagapatam and then coxswain on ML 893 for operations in the Arakan.
Hope this adds to the understanding.
David Lester